Transcript 11CS10039

BOTTOM-UP PARSING
Bottom-Up Parsing
o Bottom-Up Parser : Constructs a parse tree for an input string
beginning at the leaves(the bottom) and working up towards the
root(the top)
o We can think of this process as one of “reducing” a string w to the start
symbol of a grammar
o Bottom-up parsing is also known as shift-reduce parsing because its
two main actions are shift and reduce.
 At each shift action, the current symbol in the input string is pushed to
a stack.
At each reduction step, the symbols at the top of the stack (this symbol
sequence is the right side of a production) will replaced by the nonterminal at the left side of that production.
Shift-Reduce Parsing
o A shift-reduce parser tries to reduce the given input string into the
starting symbol.
a string

the starting symbol
reduced to
o At each reduction step, a substring of the input matching to the right
side of a production rule is replaced by the non-terminal at the left side
of that production rule.
o If the substring is chosen correctly, the right most derivation of that
string is created in the reverse order.
Rightmost Derivation:
*
S
rm 
Shift-Reduce Parser finds:

... 
S
rm
rm
Shift–Reduce Parsing-Example
o Consider the grammar
S
aABe
A
Abc | b
B
d
Input string : abbcde
aAbcde
aAde
 reduction
aABe
S
We can scan abbcde looking for a substring that matches the right side of some
production.The substrings b and d qualify.Let us choose left most b and replace it by
A,the left side of the production Ab;we thus obtain the string aAbcde.Now the
substrings Abc,b and d match the right side of some production.Although b is the
leftmost substring that matches the right side of the some production,we choose to
replace the substring Abc by A,the left side of the production AAbc.We obtain
aAde.Then replacing d by B,and then replacing the entire string by S.Thus,by a
sequence of four reductions we are able to reduce abbcde to S
Shift–Reduce Parsing-Example
o These reductions infact trace out the following right-most derivation in
reverse
S
aAde 
aAbcde rm
 abbcde
rm aABe 
rm
rm
Right Sentential Forms
o How do we know which substring to be replaced at each reduction step?
Handle
o Informally, a “handle” of a string is a substring that matches the right side
of the production,and whose reduction to nonterminal on the left side of the
production represents one step along the reverse of a rightmost derivation
▫ But not every substring matches the right side of a production rule is handle.
o Formally , a “handle” of a right sentential form γ ( ) is a production
rule A   and a position of  where the string  may be found and replaced
by A to produce the previous right-sentential form in a rightmost
derivation of .
*
S
rm A 
rm 
then Aβ in the position following α is a handle of αβω
o The string  to the right of the handle contains only terminal symbols.
Example
o Consider the example discussed in the beginning,abbcde is a right
sentential form whose handle is Ab at position 2.Likewise,aAbcde is a
right sentential form whose handle is AAbc at position 2.
o Sometimes we say “the substring β is a handle of αβω” if the
position of β and the production Aβ we have in mind are clear.
Handle Pruning
o A rightmost derivation in reverse can be obtained by “handle pruning”.That
is,we start with a string of terminals w that we wish to parse.If ω is a
sentence of grammar at hand,then ω = γ,where γn is the nth right-sentential
form of some as yet unknown rightmost derivation
S = 0 
1 
2 
... 
n-1 
n= 
rm
rm
rm
rm
rm
Input string
Handle Pruning
S = 0 
1 
2 
... 
n-1 
n= 
rm
rm
rm
rm
rm
o Start from n, find a handle Ann in n,
and replace n in by An to get n-1.
o Then find a handle An-1n-1 in n-1,
and replace n-1 in by An-1 to get n-2.
o Repeat this, until we reach S.
A Shift-Reduce Parser
E  E+T | T
T  T*F | F
F  (E) | id
Right-Most Derivation of id+id*id
E  E+T  E+T*F  E+T*id  E+F*id
 E+id*id  T+id*id  F+id*id  id+id*id
Right-Most Sentential form
id+id*id
F+id*id
T+id*id
E+id*id
E+F*id
E+T*id
E+T*F
E+T
E
HANDLE
id
F
T
id
F
Id
T*F
E+T
Reducing Production
Fid
TF
ET
Fid
TF
Fid
TT*F
EE+T
A Stack Implementation of a Shift-Reduce Parser
o There are four possible actions of a shift-parser action:
1.Shift : The next input symbol is shifted onto the top of the stack.
2.Reduce: Replace the handle on the top of the stack by the non-terminal.
3.Accept: Successful completion of parsing.
4.Error: Parser discovers a syntax error, and calls an error recovery routine.
o
o
Initial stack just contains only the end-marker $.
The end of the input string is marked by the end-marker $.
A Stack Implementation of A Shift-Reduce Parser
Stack
Input
$
$id
$F
$T
$E
$E+
$E+id
$E+F
$E+T
$E+T*
$E+T*id
$E+T*F
$E+T
$E
id+id*id$shift
+id*id$
+id*id$
+id*id$
+id*id$
Id*id$
*id$
*id$
*id$
id$
$
$
$
$
Action
Parse Tree
Reduce by Fid
Reduce by TF
Reduce by ET
Shift
Shift
Reduce by Fid
Reduce by TF
Shift
Shift
Reduce by Fid
Reduce by TT*F
Reduce by E E+T
Accept
E8
E3
+
T2
T5
F1
F4
id
id
T7
*
F6
id